Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2008/03/28
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]tedgrant@shaw.ca wrote: > Pablo mon ami, > They are expensive no question and obviously the M8 the most of the breed. > But > for me they are nothing more than tools of the trade and as I see them they > are the best for the job. Yes, Ted, expensive tools though... good you can afford it. No doubt I'd be at one if I could. Meantime I'll keep myself at shooting with some cheaper arrays. > I've never expected them, the M nor the SLR's, to be absolutely 100% > perfect > no matter the cost. WHY? Well I haven't ever come across a "perfect > photographer either!" :-) So why expect more from a human manufactured > camera. Maybe because the more you invest on tools the more you expect from them ? Still, too good it is not cameras that take good pictures but those behind cameras. So let's keep ourselves to be good human beings. > > I see the M view finder guide lines no matter how close they are as stated > by > the manufacturer. As nothing more than a kind of close proximity to what we > can expect to be on the film. But never absolutely perfectly exact. Exactly, just was wondering about makers claiming how accurate their finders are. > Sure there have been times I've used the 15mm on the M and never looked > through the camera view finder to focus just winging it knowing the depth > at > 8-11-16 is so deep it really doesn't matter because everything from the > tip of > your nose is going to be sharp. > However the wider the aperture and the closeness to subject I will focus if > I'm real tight on the subject. I wouldn't say you'd be missing a photo for just getting it sharp, wouldn't you ? I mean, what it makes a photo worth seeing/shooting/... is the subject, the moment. Not only sharpness is what we're about so it is not precision at framing either. > By the same token when you are shooting a considerable amount with the > super > wides you can just look through the camera view finder and be very very > close > to what the lens is covering without looking through the external view > finder. > The more you use the lens the more you become accustomed to what it's > covering. agree > And as far as Tina with the beast viwfinder on top of the camera I bet she > shoots more without it than with it! :-) > ted so do I, it's just that that made me curious. That of Tina saying she hates something after seeing her with such a huge viewfinder on top of her M8. Nothing to be much concerned with, actually. saludos Pablo